Polaris is not a constellation.
Polaris can be found in the constellation of Ursa Minor (also known as the Little Dipper).
eliza hutton are you from constelation pig
it debends
a constelation
A group of stars or similar.
it means something that is made from stars
city bank/ constelation
That is the latitude at which the constelation Cancer is located overhead.
Polaris is a system of 5 starts: a yellow super-giant whose mass is approx 4.5 times that of the Sun. It has two companions which are around 30% as massive and two more which are smaller and further away.
No. Polaris is a multiple star system. In the late 18th century it was resolved into two components, Polaris A and Polaris B. Later, Polaris A was resolved further into Polaris Aa and Polaris Ab. Neither Polaris Aa nor Polaris Ab are red giants. Aa is a supergiant and Ab is a dwarf; both of them are spectral class F ("yellow-white").
No. Polaris is a multiple star system. In the late 18th century it was resolved into two components, Polaris A and Polaris B. Later, Polaris A was resolved further into Polaris Aa and Polaris Ab. Neither Polaris Aa nor Polaris Ab are red giants. Aa is a supergiant and Ab is a dwarf; both of them are spectral class F ("yellow-white").
In the northern hemesphere u can find north by using the star Polaris in the constelation Ursa Minor. (Polaris is in fact a multi star system, not just one star)It is easily found by finding one of the most distinctive constelations Ursa Major or the Big Dipper. Take the two stars that make up the scoop part of the ladel (opposite the handle) and extend it up and you find to Polaris.